03 March 2010

Mutual Fund Cash Levels Near Historic Lows


The mutual funds, and those who give them their money to invest, look to be about 'all in' with regard to US equities.

As I recall, the bond funds have decent cash levels, and the piling into short term Treasuries at negative interest rates is certainly a phenomenon.

The hypocrisy and venality of the US financial sector knows no bounds, and they seem to have bought off the guardians of he public trust. The US government desperately needs to sustain confidence and the aura of recovery. They do not need a falling stock market to say the least. And yet, they have to continue funding record levels of debt issuance every month.

A lot of demand for funds, and many of the players close to flat busted.

It may be an interesting year.


SP Futures Daily Chart


The SP needs to break out of this resistance, or risk falling into a trading range, with the potential downside of a broadening top that fails and breaks lower.

The unemployment claims and same store sales tomorrow will provide some input, but the eyes of traders will be on the Non-Farm Payrolls report. I have not worked up any forecasts for it yet, but there was some concern since Larry Summers was talking the number down, based on the northeastern US snowstorms.

Was he calibrating the markets view, or setting it up, in the style of Robert Rubin who like to play the markets this way? We will know in a few days.

The pit traders are looking for an upside move to 1130, and it will take some positive jobs data to get it.

But for now the question is if the rally is consolidating its gains, or weakening for a more serious correction, or even a breakdown. Since it reached our trading objective of a 50% retracement of the big decline, the resistance here is highly significant according to any number of technical schools from Richard Russell's Dow Theory to Fibonacci retracement levels.


02 March 2010

England to Sell 3 Year Bonds - In US Dollars


“In the eyes of empire builders men are not men but instruments.” Napoleon Bonaparte

Got Gilts?


Bank of England Plans to Sell 3-Year Bonds in Dollars
By Caroline Hyde and Sonja Cheung
March 02, 2010

March 2 (Bloomberg) -- The Bank of England said it plans to sell three-year bonds in dollars to finance its foreign-exchange reserves.

The U.K. central bank hired Barclays Capital, BNP Paribas SA, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. to manage the issue, which will be benchmark in size, it said in a statement. The bank paid 106.2 basis points more than Treasuries when it issued $2 billion of three-year notes in March last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“The notes will likely receive good investor appetite seeing that it’s a AAA rated name,” said Trevor Welsh, a portfolio manager at London-based Aviva Investors, which manages about 10.5 billion pounds ($14 billion) of fixed-income assets. “This bond sale is purely a technical move for the bank’s foreign currency reserves.”

The Bank of England is seeking to raise funds as confidence in the U.K. currency plummets on concern no party will win an outright majority in a forthcoming general election. The pound weakened 7.6 percent against the dollar this year, the worst performer among the 16 major currencies, as traders bet a new administration won’t be strong enough to reduce the nation’s budget deficit of more than 12 percent.

It will be interesting to see if investors require a slightly higher spread because of sovereign risk,” Welsh said. “But if so, it won’t be more than a couple of basis points.”

The central bank has issued three-year notes in March every year since 2007 to finance foreign-exchange reserves that support its monetary policy objectives, according to the statement.

"Thy glory, O Israel, is slain upon thy high places! how are the mighty fallen!"

What next. Rupees?